Some kid won an in-game, team-sponsored Twitter contest to get upgraded to courtside seats. He had paid $6 for his ticket.

Another guy in a front-row, baseline seat fell asleep. He stayed that way for a bulk of the third quarter.

It's come to this for the Philadelphia 76ers, who were as lifeless as Sleeping Guy while being pummeled 130-110 by the Milwaukee Bucks on Monday night at the Wells Fargo Center.

Yes, the Bucks (11-45), owners of the worst record in the NBA, though perhaps not for long.

The Sixers (15-42) have the second-worst record in the league and have lost 11 consecutive games, 10 straight at home and 21 of their last 24.

They trail the Bucks by 3½ games with 25 to play in the race to the basement, where the prize is the most ping-pong balls in the NBA Draft Lottery and the best shot at landing the No. 1 overall pick.

As former Indiana Pacers star Danny Granger continues to haggle with Sixers management over a potential buyout since being shipped here at Thursday's trade deadline – when the Sixers unloaded three players, including starters Evan Turner and Spencer Hawes, in an effort to stockpile draft picks and expiring contracts – recent acquisitions Henry Sims, Eric Maynor and Byron Mullens made their Philadelphia debuts.

"They're all good to go," Sixers coach Brett Brown said, smiling in a corridor before the game. "Yep. I'm comfortable. It's 'Welcome,' and 'Get in the game.'"

Can he name them all?

"Absolutely. Yeah. I can name them all," he said, laughing. "And you'll hear me say 'Byron! Henry!' I'll say 'Eric, get that pushed!' It's part of the landscape. It's just part of coaching the Philadelphia 76ers in the year 2014.

"I like it, in a sadistic way."

More laughter. Perhaps to hide the tears.

"So it's good," Brown said. "And we look forward to seeing what these guys can do. People sort of discount it, like there's a short amount of time left. I don't see it like that. I see, what is it, 25 games? … That's a lot of games. And there are fantastic opportunities to be had. And so I can name their names, you will see them in the game, and I'm excited to go coach a game tonight."

The trio combined for 14 points on 6 of 14 shooting, seven rebounds and four assists in 50 minutes.

Mullens, who had nine points on 4 of 6 shots, hit a 3 in the final few minutes, and James Anderson followed with another from long range to push Philadelphia past the 100-point threshold, handing the fans in attendance free Big Macs. Sure, the team trailed by 27. But there was much rejoicing.

"We're really basic," Brown said, detailing the Sixers' offensive playbook. "We never really got too tricky, even at the start [of the season], but we've really even stripped down more. And I don't mind that.

"We play with energy," he said. "I thought the last game [against the Dallas Mavericks], that we competed, and we ran around. We're a bit kamikaze, we press, we trap. I think we're fourth in the NBA creating turnovers. We're fourth in the NBA in steals. That's the nature of this year's team. We're young and wild. And I don't mind it. And so we want to at least be good at it.

"That's how I want to end the year, and make sure we compete and bring a level of energy."

Brown wasn't so jovial a few hours later.

Thaddeus Young, the last holdover from the Sixers team that advanced within a victory of playing in the 2012 Eastern Conference finals, recorded 28 points, five rebounds, a career-high seven assists and six steals Monday night. But they were hollow statistics. He had just six points at halftime.

Rookie point guard Michael Carter-Williams had 20 points, but only three assists while committing five turnovers.

Meanwhile, Bucks reserve guard O.J. Mayo hit seven 3s and scored 25 to lead a whopping seven Milwaukee players in double figures, as the Bucks easily set a season-high for points in a game.

The Sixers have lost their last six by an average of more than 25 points, most in extraordinarily embarrassing fashion.

They were routed by 45 points by the Los Angeles Clippers and by 43 points by the Golden State Warriors on consecutive nights to begin that stretch, becoming just the second team in NBA history to lose back-to-back games by 40 or more points. (The other one? The Sixers. Naturally. In 1994.)

But while those efforts were inexcusable, at least those blowouts were on the road and against playoff-caliber opponents.

The noncompetitive mess against the Bucks was a new low in a season that long ago descended into the abyss.

The Sixers were outscored 43-16 in the second quarter and trailed 73-44 at halftime.

They were down 33 in the third.

And it got worse.

Sleeping Guy awoke amid the hullabaloo before the start of the fourth, as T-shirt cannons pelted empty seats and two members of the Sixers' dunking trampoline act screamed in his face.

With nearly nine minutes remaining in the game, he stood, climbed the steps and walked out of the arena.